Hiya folks,
I was recently given a new (to me, but second hand) lens, a nikon 50mm f1.4D. I took it on holiday last week along with my 18-200 lens. I guess I used the zoom for most of my time in the states due to it's flexibility, but I did put the 50mm on several times when I knew light would be low.
one example is when I went to monterey aquarium. aquariums are almost always low on light and I thought it would be an ideal place to use the f1.4 but I seemed to be having a lot of trouble getting proper focus. I know it's supposed to be difficult to get proper focus at F1.4 but still, I was really struggling.
to give some context, I had the 50mm lens on my D300, I'd set auto ISO on (figuring it's better to have a noisy picture than a blurry one), set to increase ISO at a minimum shutter speed of about 1/60 and a max ISO of 6400. sometimes I set the shutter speed higher just in case that was the problem. I tried various different focus modes including auto area and single point AF. it was all hand-held shooting and no flash.
Not sure here if it's down to me or what, but looking at the screen on the back of the camera at the time and on screen now, sometimes it feels like nothing in the shot is in focus.
some of my pictures came out sharper than others (though none looked truely sharp), but sometimes I just couldn't get the fishes in focus, even when they were barely moving. the shutter speeds should have been enough to get a sharp picture.
so what am I doing wrong? is it that hard to shoot in aquariums, have I done something stupid? or could there be an issue with the lens?
I've got some example pictures, I'll link to an external website so you can see the fullsize files. they should have all the exif data intact too.
here is one fish[1] that had the good graces to stay in one spot so I could take a series of pictures at different apertures.
F1.4
F2
F2.8
F4
F7.1
F11
the smaller apertures are clearly sharper than the wide open ones, but are they sharp enough?
two of the better pictures are:
Blue fish at F4
Seahorse at F4
so, what do you guys think?
cheers
dave
[1] I think it looks like an otocinclus?
I was recently given a new (to me, but second hand) lens, a nikon 50mm f1.4D. I took it on holiday last week along with my 18-200 lens. I guess I used the zoom for most of my time in the states due to it's flexibility, but I did put the 50mm on several times when I knew light would be low.
one example is when I went to monterey aquarium. aquariums are almost always low on light and I thought it would be an ideal place to use the f1.4 but I seemed to be having a lot of trouble getting proper focus. I know it's supposed to be difficult to get proper focus at F1.4 but still, I was really struggling.
to give some context, I had the 50mm lens on my D300, I'd set auto ISO on (figuring it's better to have a noisy picture than a blurry one), set to increase ISO at a minimum shutter speed of about 1/60 and a max ISO of 6400. sometimes I set the shutter speed higher just in case that was the problem. I tried various different focus modes including auto area and single point AF. it was all hand-held shooting and no flash.
Not sure here if it's down to me or what, but looking at the screen on the back of the camera at the time and on screen now, sometimes it feels like nothing in the shot is in focus.
some of my pictures came out sharper than others (though none looked truely sharp), but sometimes I just couldn't get the fishes in focus, even when they were barely moving. the shutter speeds should have been enough to get a sharp picture.
so what am I doing wrong? is it that hard to shoot in aquariums, have I done something stupid? or could there be an issue with the lens?
I've got some example pictures, I'll link to an external website so you can see the fullsize files. they should have all the exif data intact too.
here is one fish[1] that had the good graces to stay in one spot so I could take a series of pictures at different apertures.
F1.4
F2
F2.8
F4
F7.1
F11
the smaller apertures are clearly sharper than the wide open ones, but are they sharp enough?
two of the better pictures are:
Blue fish at F4
Seahorse at F4
so, what do you guys think?
cheers
dave
[1] I think it looks like an otocinclus?